D-Link Storage User manual

Category
NAS & storage servers
Type
User manual

This manual is also suitable for

1
D-Link iSCSI IP SAN storage
10GbE iSCSI to SATA II / SAS
RAID IP SAN storage
DSN-6410 & DSN-6420
User Manual
Version 1.0
2
Preface
Copyright
Copyright@2011, D-Link Corporation. All rights reserved. No part of this manual may
be reproduced or transmitted without written permission from D-Link corporation.
Trademarks
All products and trade names used in this manual are trademarks or registered trademarks
of their respective companies.
About this manual
This manual is the introduction of D-Link DSN-64x0 IP SAN storage and it aims to help
users know the operations of the disk array system easily. Information contained in this
manual has been reviewed for accuracy, but not for product warranty because of the
various environments / OS / settings. Information and specification herein are subject to
change without notice. For any update information, please visit www.dlink.com.
Model comparison
DSN-6400 series adopt 2U12 form factor for all models. DSN-64x0 IP SAN storages
stand for the following models.
DSN-6420: Dual controllers.
DSN-6410: Single controller, can be upgradable to dual mode.
The dual controller specific functions such as dual-active, cache mirroring, flexible RG
ownership management, management port seamless take-over, no system down time,
and etc are not available in DSN-6410.
Caution
Do not attempt to service, chan
g
e, disassemble or up
g
rade the equipment’s
components by yourself. Doing so may violate your warranty and expose
you to electric shock. Refer all servicin
g
to authorized service personnel.
Please always follow the instructions in this user’s manual.
3
Table of Contents
Chapter 1 Overview..................................................................6
1.1 Features.........................................................................................6
1.1.1 Highlights.................................................................................................................6
1.2 RAID concepts...............................................................................7
1.2.1 Terminology.............................................................................................................8
1.2.2 RAID levels.............................................................................................................10
1.2.3 Volume relationship................................................................................................11
1.3 iSCSI concepts.............................................................................12
1.4 IP SAN storage specifications ......................................................13
1.4.1 Technical specifications..........................................................................................13
1.4.2 FCC and CE statements..........................................................................................16
Chapter 2 Installation............................................................19
2.1 Package contents.........................................................................19
2.2 Before installation........................................................................19
2.3 Enclosure .....................................................................................19
2.3.1 Front view..............................................................................................................19
2.3.2 Front LED lights .....................................................................................................20
2.3.3 Install drives...........................................................................................................21
2.3.4 Rear view...............................................................................................................22
2.4 Install battery backup module .....................................................25
2.5 Deployment..................................................................................26
Chapter 3 Quick setup............................................................29
3.1 Management interfaces ...............................................................29
3.1.1 Serial console.........................................................................................................29
3.1.2 Remote control.......................................................................................................29
3.1.3 Web UI...................................................................................................................30
3.2 How to use the system quickly....................................................32
3.2.1 Quick installation....................................................................................................32
3.2.2 Volume creation wizard..........................................................................................35
Chapter 4 Configuration ........................................................38
4.1 Web UI management interface hierarchy....................................38
4.2 System configuration...................................................................39
4.2.1 System setting .......................................................................................................39
4.2.2 Network setting......................................................................................................40
4.2.3 Login setting ..........................................................................................................41
4.2.4 Mail setting.............................................................................................................42
4.2.5 Notification setting.................................................................................................43
4.3 iSCSI configuration ......................................................................45
4.3.1 NIC.........................................................................................................................45
4.3.2 Entity property.......................................................................................................48
4.3.3 Node ......................................................................................................................48
4.3.4 Session...................................................................................................................51
4.3.5 CHAP account ........................................................................................................52
4.4 Volume configuration...................................................................53
4
4.4.1
Physical disk...........................................................................................................54
4.4.2 RAID group............................................................................................................57
4.4.3 Virtual disk.............................................................................................................60
4.4.4 Snapshot................................................................................................................65
4.4.5 Logical unit.............................................................................................................68
4.4.6 Example.................................................................................................................69
4.5 Enclosure management ...............................................................74
4.5.1 Hardware monitor..................................................................................................75
4.5.2 UPS ........................................................................................................................76
4.5.3 SES.........................................................................................................................78
4.5.4 Hard drive S.M.A.R.T. ............................................................................................78
4.6 System maintenance....................................................................79
4.6.1 System information................................................................................................79
4.6.2 Event log................................................................................................................80
4.6.3 Upgrade.................................................................................................................82
4.6.4 Firmware synchronization ......................................................................................82
4.6.5 Reset to factory default..........................................................................................83
4.6.6 Import and export..................................................................................................83
4.6.7 Reboot and shutdown............................................................................................84
4.7 Home/Logout/Mute......................................................................84
4.7.1 Home .....................................................................................................................84
4.7.2 Logout....................................................................................................................84
4.7.3 Mute.......................................................................................................................85
Chapter 5 Advanced operations...........................................86
5.1 Volume rebuild.............................................................................86
5.2 RG migration................................................................................88
5.3 VD extension................................................................................89
5.4 Snapshot......................................................................................89
5.4.1 Create snapshot volume.........................................................................................90
5.4.2 Auto snapshot........................................................................................................91
5.4.3 Rollback..................................................................................................................92
5.4.4 Snapshot constraint ...............................................................................................93
5.5 Disk roaming................................................................................95
5.6 VD clone ......................................................................................95
5.7 SAS JBOD expansion..................................................................103
5.7.1 Connecting JBOD .................................................................................................103
5.7.2 Upgrade firmware of JBOD ..................................................................................105
5.8 MPIO and MC/S .........................................................................106
5.9 Trunking and LACP ....................................................................108
5.10 Dual controllers (only for DSN-6420).........................................109
5.10.1 Perform I/O..........................................................................................................109
5.10.2 Ownership............................................................................................................110
5.10.3 Controller status...................................................................................................111
5.11 Replication.................................................................................112
5.12 VLAN..........................................................................................122
Chapter 6 Troubleshooting .................................................125
6.1 System buzzer............................................................................125
5
6.2 Event notifications .....................................................................125
Appendix 133
A. Certification list..........................................................................133
B. Microsoft iSCSI initiator..............................................................136
C. From Single controller to Dual Controller ……………………. 142
6
Chapter 1 Overview
1.1 Features
D-LINK DSN-6000 series IP SAN storage provides non-stop service with a high degree of
fault tolerance by using D-LINK RAID technology and advanced array management
features.
DSN-6410/6420 IP SAN storage connects to the host system by iSCSI interface. It can
be configured to numerous RAID level. The IP SAN storage provides reliable data
protection for servers by using RAID 6. The RAID 6 allows two HDD failures without any
impact on the existing data. Data can be recovered from the existing data and parity
drives. (Data can be recovered from the rest drives.)
Figure 1.1.1 (DSN-6410/6420)
Snapshot-on-the-box is a fully usable copy of a defined collection of data that contains
an image of the data as it appeared at the point in time, which means a point-in-time data
replication. It provides consistent and instant copies of data volumes without any system
downtime. Snapshot-on-the-box can keep up to 32 snapshots for one logical volume.
Rollback feature is provided for restoring the previous-snapshot data easily while
continuously using the volume for further data access. The data access which includes
read / write is working as usual without any impact to end users. The "on-the-box" implies
that it does not require any proprietary agents installed at host side. The snapshot is taken
at target side. It will not consume any host CPU time thus the server is dedicated to the
specific or other application. The snapshot copies can be taken manually or by schedule
every hour or every day, depends on the modification.
D-LINK IP SAN storage is the most cost-effective disk array system with completely
integrated high-performance and data-protection capabilities which meet or exceed the
highest industry standards, and the best data solution for small / medium business
(SMB) and enterprise users.
1.1.1 Highlights
7
D-LINK DSN-6410/6420 feature highlights
Host
Interface
4 x 10GbE iSCSI ports (DSN-6420)
2 x 10GbE iSCSI ports (DSN-6410)
Drive
Interface
12 x SAS or SATA II
RAID
Controllers
Dual-active RAID controllers (DSN-6420)
Single controller, but can be upgradable to dual (DSN-6410)
Scalability SAS JBOD expansion port
Green Auto disk spin-down
Advanced cooling
RAID Level RAID 0, 1, 0+1, 3, 5, 6, 10, 30, 50, 60 and JBOD
N-way mirror
Compatibility Support multiple OSes, applications, 10GbE NIC, 10GbE iSCSI
HBA, and etc.
Virtualization VMWare, Hyper-V, Citrix
Data
Protection
Snapshot (Read only and Writeable), Storage base Replication
Connection
Availability
Load balancing and failover support on the 4 x 10GbE iSCSI
ports
Dimension
(W x D x H)
442.8 x 500.6 x 88.0 (mm)
Power
Supply
2 x 500W PSU
Cache
Protection
Hot pluggable battery backup module
Fan Redundant
1.2 RAID concepts
8
RAID is the abbreviation of “Redundant Array of Independent Disks. The basic idea of
RAID is to combine multiple drives together to form one large logical drive. This RAID
drive obtains performance, capacity and reliability than a single drive. The operating
system detects the RAID drive as a single storage device.
1.2.1 Terminology
The document uses the following terms:
Part 1: Common
RAID Redundant Array of Independent Disks. There are different
RAID levels with different degree of data protection, data
availability, and performance to host environment.
PD The Physical Disk belongs to the member disk of one specific
RAID group.
RG Raid Group. A collection of removable media. One RG consists
of a set of VDs and owns one RAID level attribute.
VD Virtual Disk. Each RD could be divided into several VDs. The VDs
from one RG have the same RAID level, but may have different
volume capacity.
LUN Logical Unit Number. A logical unit number (LUN) is a unique
identifier which enables it to differentiate among separate
devices (each one is a logical unit).
GUI Graphic User Interface.
RAID cell
When creating a RAID group with a compound RAID level, such as 10,
30, 50 and 60, this field indicates the number of subgroups in the RAID
group. For example, 8 disks can be grouped into a RAID group of RAID
10 with 2 cells, 4 cells. In the 2-cell case, PD {0, 1, 2, 3} forms one RAID
1 subgroup and PD {4, 5, 6, 7} forms another RAID 1 subgroup. In the 4-
cells, the 4 subgroups are PD {0, 1}, PD {2, 3}, PD {4, 5} and PD {6,7}.
WT Write-Through cache-write policy. A caching technique in which
the completion of a write request is not signaled until data is
safely stored in non-volatile media. Each data is synchronized in
both data cache and accessed physical disks.
WB Write-Back cache-write policy. A caching technique in which the
completion of a write request is signaled as soon as the data is
9
in cache and actual writing to non-volatile media occurs at a
later time. It speeds up system write performance but needs to
bear the risk where data may be inconsistent between data
cache and the physical disks in one short time interval.
RO Set the volume to be Read-Only.
DS Dedicated Spare disks. The spare disks are only used by one
specific RG. Others could not use these dedicated spare disks for
any rebuilding purpose.
GS Global Spare disks. GS is shared for rebuilding purpose. If some
RGs need to use the global spare disks for rebuilding, they could
get the spare disks out from the common spare disks pool for
such requirement.
DG DeGraded mode. Not all of the array’s member disks are
functioning, but the array is able to respond to application read
and write requests to its virtual disks.
SCSI Small Computer Systems Interface.
SAS Serial Attached SCSI.
S.M.A.R.T. Self-Monitoring Analysis and Reporting Technology.
WWN World Wide Name.
HBA Host Bus Adapter.
SES SCSI Enclosure Services.
NIC Network Interface Card.
BBM Battery Backup Module
Part 2: iSCSI
iSCSI Internet Small Computer Systems Interface.
LACP Link Aggregation Control Protocol.
MPIO Multi-Path Input/Output.
MC/S Multiple Connections per Session
10
MTU Maximum Transmission Unit.
CHAP
Challenge Handshake Authentication Protocol. An optional
security mechanism to control access to an iSCSI storage system
over the iSCSI data ports.
iSNS Internet Storage Name Service.
Part 3: Dual controller
SBB Storage Bridge Bay. The objective of the Storage Bridge Bay
Working Group (SBB) is to create a specification that defines
mechanical, electrical and low-level enclosure management
requirements for an enclosure controller slot that will support a
variety of storage controllers from a variety of independent
hardware vendors (“IHVs”) and system vendors.
Part 4: 10GbE
SFP+ Small Form-factor Pluggable is a compact, hot-pluggable
transceiver used for both Fibre Channel and 10GbE.
CX4 10GBASE-CX4, a copper based 10 Gigabit Ethernet PHY.
1.2.2 RAID levels
There are different RAID levels with different degree of data protection, data availability,
and performance to host environment. The description of RAID levels are on the following:
RAID 0 Disk striping. RAID 0 needs at least one hard drive.
RAID 1 Disk mirroring over two disks. RAID 1 needs at least two hard drives.
N-way mirror Extension to RAID 1 level. It has N copies of the disk.
RAID 3 Striping with parity on the dedicated disk. RAID 3 needs at least three
hard drives.
RAID 5 Striping with interspersed parity over the member disks. RAID 3
needs at least three hard drives.
RAID 6 2-dimensional parity protection over the member disks. RAID 6 needs
at least four hard drives.
RAID 0+1 Mirroring of the member RAID 0 volumes. RAID 0+1 needs at least
11
four hard drives.
RAID 10 Striping over the member RAID 1 volumes. RAID 10 needs at least
four hard drives.
RAID 30 Striping over the member RAID 3 volumes. RAID 30 needs at least six
hard drives.
RAID 50 Striping over the member RAID 5 volumes. RAID 50 needs at least six
hard drives.
RAID 60 Striping over the member RAID 6 volumes. RAID 60 needs at least
eight hard drives.
JBOD The abbreviation of “Just a Bunch Of Disks. JBOD needs at least
one hard drive.
1.2.3 Volume relationship
The below graphic is the volume structure which D-LINK has designed. It describes the
relationship of RAID components. One RG (RAID group) consists of a set of VDs (Virtual
Disk) and owns one RAID level attribute. Each RG can be divided into several VDs. The
VDs in one RG share the same RAID level, but may have different volume capacity. All
VDs share the CV (Cache Volume) to execute the data transaction. LUN (Logical Unit
Number) is a unique identifier, in which users can access through SCSI commands.
Figure 1.2.3.1
RG
PD 2 PD 3 DS PD 1
VD 1 VD 2
Snapshot
VD
RAM
Cache Volume
+
LUN 1
LUN 2
LUN 3
+
+
12
1.3 iSCSI concepts
iSCSI (Internet SCSI) is a protocol which encapsulates SCSI (Small Computer System
Interface) commands and data in TCP/IP packets for linking storage devices with servers
over common IP infrastructures. iSCSI provides high performance SANs over standard IP
networks like LAN, WAN or the Internet.
IP SANs are true SANs (Storage Area Networks) which allow several servers to attach to
an infinite number of storage volumes by using iSCSI over TCP/IP networks. IP SANs can
scale the storage capacity with any type and brand of storage system. In addition, it can
be used by any type of network (Ethernet, Fast Ethernet, Gigabit Ethernet, and 10 Gigabit
Ethernet) and combination of operating systems (Microsoft Windows, Linux, Solaris, Mac,
etc.) within the SAN network. IP-SANs also include mechanisms for security, data
replication, multi-path and high availability.
Storage protocol, such as iSCSI, has “two ends” in the connection. These ends are initiator
and target. In iSCSI, we call them iSCSI initiator and iSCSI target. The iSCSI initiator
requests or initiates any iSCSI communication. It requests all SCSI operations like read or
write. An initiator is usually located on the host side (either an iSCSI HBA or iSCSI SW
initiator).
The target is the storage device itself or an appliance which controls and serves volumes
or virtual volumes. The target is the device which performs SCSI command or bridge to an
attached storage device.
Figure 1.3.1
The host side needs an iSCSI initiator. The initiator is a driver which handles the SCSI
traffic over iSCSI. The initiator can be software or hardware (HBA). Please refer to the
certification list of iSCSI HBA(s) in Appendix A. OS native initiators or other software
initiators use standard TCP/IP stack and Ethernet hardware, while iSCSI HBA(s) use their
own iSCSI and TCP/IP stacks on board.
iSCSI device 1
(target)
Host 1
(initiator)
NI
C
IP SAN
Host 2
(initiator)
iSCSI
HBA
iSCSI device 2
(target)
13
Hardware iSCSI HBA(s) provide its own initiator tool. Please refer to the vendors’ HBA user
manual. Microsoft, Linux, Solaris and Mac provide iSCSI initiator driver. Please contact D-
LINK for the latest certification list. Below are the available links:
1. Link to download the Microsoft iSCSI software initiator:
http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/details.aspx?FamilyID=12cb3c1a-15d6-4585-
b385-befd1319f825&DisplayLang=en
2. In current Linux distributions, OS built-in iSCSI initiators are usually available. For
different kernels, there are different iSCSI drivers. Please check Appendix A for iSCSI
initiator certification list. If user needs the latest Linux iSCSI initiator, please visit
Open-iSCSI project for most update information. Linux-iSCSI (sfnet) and Open-iSCSI
projects merged in April 11, 2005.
Open-iSCSI website: http://www.open-iscsi.org/
Open-iSCSI README: http://www.open-iscsi.org/docs/README
Features: http://www.open-iscsi.org/cgi-bin/wiki.pl/Roadmap
Support Kernels:
http://www.open-iscsi.org/cgi-bin/wiki.pl/Supported_Kernels
Google groups:
http://groups.google.com/group/open-iscsi/threads?gvc=2
http://groups.google.com/group/open-iscsi/topics
Open-iSCSI Wiki: http://www.open-iscsi.org/cgi-bin/wiki.pl
3. ATTO iSCSI initiator is available for Mac.
Website: http://www.attotech.com/xtend.html
4. Solaris iSCSI initiator
Version: Solaris 10 u6 (10/08)
1.4 IP SAN storage specifications
1.4.1 Technical specifications
Controller features
1. Dual-active configuration support (only for DSN-6420)
2. Better performance, when comparing to other competitors' products in the same
segment
3. Cache mirroring through high bandwidth channels (only for DSN-6420)
4. Flexible RAID group (RG) ownership management (only for DSN-6420)
Each RG can be assigned to one of the two controllers
Each LUN can be exported from both controllers
5. Management port seamless take-over (only for DSN-6420)
14
The management port can be transferred smoothly to the other controller with
the same IP address
6. Online firmware upgrade, no system down time (only for DSN-6420)
7. Multiple target iSCSI nodes per controller support
Each LUN can be attached to one of 32 nodes from each controller
8. Front-end 2 x 10GbE iSCSI ports with high availability/load balancing/fail-over support
per controller
Microsoft MPIO, MC/S, Trunking, LACP, and etc.
9. SBB Compliant
System key components
1. CPU: Intel Xscale IOP 81342
2. Memory: 4GB DDRII 533 DIMM
3. Hardware iSCSI off-load engine
4. 2 x UARTs: serial console management and UPS
5. Fast Ethernet port for web-based management use
6. Backend: 12 x SAS or SATA II drive connections
7. Front-end: 2 x 10GbE iSCSI ports per controller
8. Hot pluggable BBM
9. SAS JBOD expansion port for expansion
10. Multiplexer board support for SATA drives (optional, on Dual controller mode)
11. Two power supplies
12. Redundant fans
RAID and volume operation
1. RAID level: 0,1,0+1,3,5,6,10,30,50, 60, JBOD, and N-way mirror
2. Up to 1024 logical volumes in the system
3. Up to 32 PDs can be included in one volume group
4. Global and dedicated hot spare disks
5. Write-through or write-back cache policy for different application usage
6. Multiple RAID volumes support
7. Configurable RAID stripe size
8. Online volume expansion
9. Instant RAID volume availability
10. Auto volume rebuilding
11. On-line volume migration with no system down-time
Advanced data protection
1. D-Link writeable snapshot
Built-in snapshot with rollback enabled
Snapshot enabled up to 16 volumes, each logical volume supports up to 32
snapshot volumes, total 512 snapshot volumes per system
2. Microsoft Windows Volume Shadow Copy Services (VSS)
3. Configurable N-way mirror for high data protection
4. Online disk roaming
15
5. Instant volume configuration restoration
6. Smart faulty sector relocation
7. Hot pluggable battery backup module support
Enclosure monitoring
1. S.E.S. inband management
2. UPS management via dedicated serial port
3. Fan speed monitors
4. Redundant power supply monitors
5. Voltage monitors
6. Thermal sensors for both RAID controller and enclosure
7. Status monitors for D-LINK SAS JBODs
Management interface
1. Management UI via
serial console
SSH telnet
HTTP Web UI
secured Web (HTTPS)
2. Notification via
Email
SNMP trap
Browser pop-up windows
Syslog
Windows Messenger
3. iSNS support
4. DHCP support
iSCSI features
1. iSCSI jumbo frame support
2. Header/Data digest support
3. CHAP authentication enabled
4. Load-balancing and failover through MPIO, MC/S, Trunking, and LACP
5. Up to 32 multiple nodes support
6. VLAN support
Host connection
1. 2 x 10GbE iSCSI ports per controller
2. Host access control: Read-Write and Read-Only
3. Up to 128 sessions per controller
4. One logic volume can be shared by as many as 16 hosts
OS support
16
Windows
Linux
Solaris
Mac
Drive support
1. SAS
2. SATA II (optional)
3. SCSI-3 compliant
4. Multiple IO transaction processing
5. Tagged command queuing
6. Disk auto spin-down support
7. S.M.A.R.T. for SATA II drives
8. SAS JBODs expansion
Power and Environment
AC input: 100-240V ~ 7A-4A 500W with PFC (Auto Switching)
DC output: 3.3V-21A; 5V-39A; 12V-30A
Operating Temperature: 0 to 40
Relative Humidity: 5% to 95% non-condensing
Dimensions
2U 12 bay 19 inch rackmount chassis
442.8mm x 500.6mm x 88.0mm (W x D x H)
1.4.2 FCC and CE statements
FCC statement
This device has been shown to be in compliance with and was tested in accordance with
the measurement procedures specified in the Standards and Specifications listed below
and as indicated in the measurement report number: xxxxxxxx-F
Technical Standard: FCC Part 15 Class A (Verification)
IC ICES-003
CE statement
This device has been shown to be in compliance with and was tested in accordance with
the measurement procedures specified in the Standards and Specifications listed below
and as indicated in the measurement report number: xxxxxxxx-E
Technical Standard: EMC DIRECTIVE 2004/108/EC
17
(EN55022 / EN55024)
UL statement
FCC statement
This device has been shown to be in compliance with and was tested in accordance with
the measurement procedures specified in the Standards and Specifications listed below
and as indicated in the measurement report number: xxxxxxxx-F
Technical Standard: FCC Part 15 Class A (Verification)
IC ICES-003
CE statement
This device has been shown to be in compliance with and was tested in accordance with
the measurement procedures specified in the Standards and Specifications listed below
and as indicated in the measurement report number: xxxxxxxx-E
Technical Standard: EMC DIRECTIVE 2004/108/EC
(EN55022 / EN55024)
UL statement
Rack Mount Instructions - The following or similar rack-mount instructions are included
with the installation instructions:
A. Elevated Operating Ambient - If installed in a closed or multi-unit rack assembly, the
operating ambient temperature of the rack environment may be greater than room
ambient. Therefore, consideration should be given to installing the equipment in an
environment compatible with the maximum ambient temperature (Tma) specified by
the manufacturer.
B. Reduced Air Flow - Installation of the equipment in a rack should be such that the
amount of air flow required for safe operation of the equipment is not compromised.
C. Mechanical Loading - Mounting of the equipment in the rack should be such that a
hazardous condition is not achieved due to uneven mechanical loading.
D. Circuit Overloading - Consideration should be given to the connection of the
equipment to the supply circuit and the effect that overloading of the circuits might
have on overcurrent protection and supply wiring. Appropriate consideration of
equipment nameplate ratings should be used when addressing this concern.
E. Reliable Earthing - Reliable earthing of rack-mounted equipment should be
maintained. Particular attention should be given to supply connections other than
direct connections to the branch circuit (e.g. use of power strips).
Caution
T
he main purpose of the handles is for rack mount use only. Do not use the
handles to carry or transport the systems.
18
The ITE is not intended to be installed and used in a home, school or public area
accessible to the general population, and the thumbscrews should be tightened with a tool
after both initial installation and subsequent access to the panel.
Warning: Remove all power supply cords before service
This equipment intended for installation in restricted access location.
Access can only be gained by SERVICE PERSONS or by USERS who have been
instructed about the reasons for the restrictions applied to the location and about any
precautions that shall be taken.
Access is through the use of a TOOL or lock and key, or other means of security, and
is controlled by the authority responsible for the location.
Caution
Risk of explosion if battery is replaced by incorrect type. Dispose of used
batteries according to the instructions.
19
Chapter 2 Installation
2.1 Package contents
The package contains the following items:
1. DSN-6410/6420 IP SAN storage (x1)
2. HDD trays (x12)
3. Power cords (x4)
4. RS-232 cables (x2), one is for console, the other is for UPS.
5. CD (x1)
6. Rail kit (x1 set)
7. Keys, screws for drives and rail kit (x1 packet)
8. SFP and 5 Meter cable
2.2 Before installation
Before starting, prepare the following items.
1. A host with a Gigabit Ethernet NIC or iSCSI HBA.
2. CAT 5e, or CAT 6 network cables for management port and iSCSI data ports.
3. Prepare storage system configuration plan.
4. Prepare management port and iSCSI data ports network information. When using
static IP, please prepare static IP addresses, subnet mask, and default gateway.
5. 10GbE switches (recommended). Or 10GbE switches with LCAP / Trunking (optional).
6. CHAP security information, including CHAP username and secret (optional).
2.3 Enclosure
2.3.1 Front view
Figure 2.3.1.1 (DSN-6410/6420)
Drive slot numbering
Slot 1 Slot 4 Slot 7 Slot 10
Slot 2 Slot 5 Slot 8 Slot 11
Slot 3 Slot 6 Slot 9 Slot 12
20
The drives can be installed into any slot in the enclosure. Slot numbering will be reflected
in web UI.
Tips
It is advisable to install at least one drive in slots 1 ~ 4. System event lo
g
s
are saved to drives in these slots; If no drives are fitted the event lo
g
s will
be lost in the event of a system reboot.
2.3.2 Front LED lights
There are three LED lights on the left frame bar.
Figure 2.3.2.1
LED lights description:
Power LED:
Green Power on.
Off Power off.
Status LED:
Red System is failure.
Off System is good.
Access LED:
Blue Host is accessing.
Off Host is no access.
  • Page 1 1
  • Page 2 2
  • Page 3 3
  • Page 4 4
  • Page 5 5
  • Page 6 6
  • Page 7 7
  • Page 8 8
  • Page 9 9
  • Page 10 10
  • Page 11 11
  • Page 12 12
  • Page 13 13
  • Page 14 14
  • Page 15 15
  • Page 16 16
  • Page 17 17
  • Page 18 18
  • Page 19 19
  • Page 20 20
  • Page 21 21
  • Page 22 22
  • Page 23 23
  • Page 24 24
  • Page 25 25
  • Page 26 26
  • Page 27 27
  • Page 28 28
  • Page 29 29
  • Page 30 30
  • Page 31 31
  • Page 32 32
  • Page 33 33
  • Page 34 34
  • Page 35 35
  • Page 36 36
  • Page 37 37
  • Page 38 38
  • Page 39 39
  • Page 40 40
  • Page 41 41
  • Page 42 42
  • Page 43 43
  • Page 44 44
  • Page 45 45
  • Page 46 46
  • Page 47 47
  • Page 48 48
  • Page 49 49
  • Page 50 50
  • Page 51 51
  • Page 52 52
  • Page 53 53
  • Page 54 54
  • Page 55 55
  • Page 56 56
  • Page 57 57
  • Page 58 58
  • Page 59 59
  • Page 60 60
  • Page 61 61
  • Page 62 62
  • Page 63 63
  • Page 64 64
  • Page 65 65
  • Page 66 66
  • Page 67 67
  • Page 68 68
  • Page 69 69
  • Page 70 70
  • Page 71 71
  • Page 72 72
  • Page 73 73
  • Page 74 74
  • Page 75 75
  • Page 76 76
  • Page 77 77
  • Page 78 78
  • Page 79 79
  • Page 80 80
  • Page 81 81
  • Page 82 82
  • Page 83 83
  • Page 84 84
  • Page 85 85
  • Page 86 86
  • Page 87 87
  • Page 88 88
  • Page 89 89
  • Page 90 90
  • Page 91 91
  • Page 92 92
  • Page 93 93
  • Page 94 94
  • Page 95 95
  • Page 96 96
  • Page 97 97
  • Page 98 98
  • Page 99 99
  • Page 100 100
  • Page 101 101
  • Page 102 102
  • Page 103 103
  • Page 104 104
  • Page 105 105
  • Page 106 106
  • Page 107 107
  • Page 108 108
  • Page 109 109
  • Page 110 110
  • Page 111 111
  • Page 112 112
  • Page 113 113
  • Page 114 114
  • Page 115 115
  • Page 116 116
  • Page 117 117
  • Page 118 118
  • Page 119 119
  • Page 120 120
  • Page 121 121
  • Page 122 122
  • Page 123 123
  • Page 124 124
  • Page 125 125
  • Page 126 126
  • Page 127 127
  • Page 128 128
  • Page 129 129
  • Page 130 130
  • Page 131 131
  • Page 132 132
  • Page 133 133
  • Page 134 134
  • Page 135 135
  • Page 136 136
  • Page 137 137
  • Page 138 138
  • Page 139 139
  • Page 140 140
  • Page 141 141
  • Page 142 142
  • Page 143 143
  • Page 144 144
  • Page 145 145
  • Page 146 146

D-Link Storage User manual

Category
NAS & storage servers
Type
User manual
This manual is also suitable for

Ask a question and I''ll find the answer in the document

Finding information in a document is now easier with AI